Submitted:
25 July 2025
Posted:
28 July 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
Introduction: Desire, Dissolution, and the Abject Body
Radical Intimacy and the Erasure of Self
Abjection and the Eroticization of “That Which is Cast Off”
Embodied Testimony: Szapocznikow's Relics of Unspeakable Trauma
Cannibalistic Fantasy: Empowerment in Intense Vulnerability
Horn’s ‘Unicorn’ as a Ritual of Submission and Empowerment
Consensual Surrender as Transformative Power
Patriarchal Objectification of Women as “Meat” or Chattel
Sacred Wounds and Dresses: Sanctifying the Consumed Female Body
The Expendable Self: Cannibalistic Metaphors in Late Capitalism
Bound Bodies: Ramberg's Visualization of Corporeal Containment
Religious, Cultural, and Mythological Archetypes Of Consumption and Abjection
Totemic Sacrifices: Kozyra's Pyramid and the Ritualization of Death
Stryker’s ‘Transgender Rage’ and the Power of Monstrosity
Metamorphosis Through Surrender—The Body as Threshold to Liberation
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| 1 | While many vorarephilic fantasies center on absorption and transformation, a distinct subgenre—often referred to as "Dolcett" or "hard vore"—emphasizes ritualized dismemberment and aestheticized violence. These scenarios are frequently situated in male-dominated spaces and focus on domination, spectacle, and eroticized destruction. Scholars such as Langley (2023) and Newmahr (2011) have argued that, even in their most extreme forms, such fantasies function as symbolic enactments of power, control, and erotic guilt rather than endorsements of literal harm. |
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